Unlisted video for the VSL community:
In this video, you will hear 3 small excerpts from each piece. One fast/loud, the other soft and intimate.
My initial observations for users/developers:
- In Nimrod, I found myself engaged in an epic amount of tweaking legato transitions. Granted, I still call myself a novice user, I felt like it took quiet a bit more time to tame this library than my go-to library, Dimension Strings (I fully expect though, once I'm better at using the Synchron Player, I will get faster at rendering a desired result). The faster passages in Ein Heldenleben went faster than when I program Dimension Strings. I needed only a couple articulations per instrument, whereas in Nimrod I had to create new ones because the stock articulations weren't enough.
- The edit page is a savior. (Pro tip so you don't waste time, make sure if you edit one patch, you rename it so your changes don't effect the others in that patch "family.") What would be exceedingly useful would be for some sort of "Start" fader that could be automated, like in the VIPro2 player.
- For some reason, I found myself using articulations I didn't expect to use as a solution to certain problems. For example, using the soft legato articulation for two repeated notes is unnatural on SOME notes (on other notes it works fine). As a solution, I tried to cut into the sample with "start offset." When that failed, I tried crossfading between various vibratos... CC automation legato blur, velocity xfade, expression, etc. Nothing was satisfactory. What did work? Fast Marcato (on Nimrod... which is soft/slow) with a medium velocity and the Attack CC turned up a bit with legato blur at 127.
- You can totally get away with divisi parts with alternative mic mixes. If you have the full library, you can manipulate the panning/level/EQ on the close/mid/back mics, then turn down the room mics a little. Sounds nice.
- In creating a convincing string mockup, I've found a short-coming in the near perfection of the tuning. I have listened to every single Ein Heldenleben recording I could find, and the top orchestras in the world don't play those fast passages clean, nor are any of them in tune with themselves. If there were some sort of tuning parameter that would help, but I suppose the only current solution is to blend with another library (would LOVE to see Synchronized Dimension Strings!)
What does everyone else think?
(EDIT: One last thing, the 1st Violins I had the most trouble with. The rest of the string sections' legatos "behaved" much better... I wonder why that is?)